Disraeli, Quebec (city)
Disraeli is a small city in Quebec, Canada. It’s in the Chaudière-Appalaches region and is part of the Les Appalaches regional county municipality. The city sits inside the parish of Disraeli but is its own separate municipality.
Disraeli covers about 6.8 square kilometers. Its population was about 2,360 in 2021, with a density of around 347 people per square kilometer. The number of residents has stayed in the mid-2,000s in recent years.
The city is named after Benjamin Disraeli, a British statesman and writer.
A notable church is the Church of Sainte-Luce, built between 1924 and 1926 after a fire destroyed the old church in 1924. The original presbytery from 1890–1891 still stands. The church’s cemetery has a dead house and a calvary, and there is a grotto that commemorates Lourdes apparitions.
Many 19th century houses can be found on Champoux Street and East Saint-Joseph Street, with other period buildings in the nearby parish.
This page was last edited on 2 February 2026, at 01:37 (CET).